
When Richard Pryor dressed up as “a tribal bushman”
This was for the cover art of one of his comedy albums: “The cover looked totally real, like a cover of National Geographic.”
6443 Article(s) by:
Rita Nketiah is a feminist researcher, writer and activist living in Accra, Ghana.

This was for the cover art of one of his comedy albums: “The cover looked totally real, like a cover of National Geographic.”

British filmmaker John Akonfrah will be artist-in-residence this Spring at New York University’s Institute of African American Affairs.



How did Kenya and Kenyans get their reputations in US politics, particularly among U.S.. rightwingers, as anti-American?


Homosexuality can get you beheaded in Saudi Arabia and there are several other places with similar policies. But, Uganda’s pretty bad.

Colonel Gaddafi’s alleged use of “black mercenaries,” has put the question of race in Libya’s revolution front and center.

A number of North American pop artists have lent their star power to African dictators.


When ‘culture’ looks like poverty and poverty ‘looks like culture’ any questions about the structural and geopolitical causes of poverty are easily muted.

Peter Muhumuza Tuke’s film “Kengere” – using puppets – tells the story of how soldiers trapped 69 people in a train that was then set on fire during Uganda’s civil war.

Commercials to promote a retro music show on a local Cape Town, South Africa-radio station provides a necessary corrective to the amnesia and myth making in the country’s public (and popular) life.

An eclectic playlist of music that features musicians as diverse as Horace Silver, Obour, Black Dillinger and Mzungu Kichaa.